Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 14 – Since the
Union state was declared by Moscow and Minsk almost 25 years ago, it has gone
through an evolutionary process. What began as a move to unify the two
countries, then became a plan for Russia to “swallow” Belarus, and now is a
different one in which Russia seek to take what it wants via mafia methods,
Vladimir Pastukhov says.
With the Sochi meeting, the final
stage in the evolution of the Union state between the two is beginning, the
London-based Russian analyst says. “Unification is buried, and no one needs formal
incorporation.” Instead, the Kremlin wants only to get as much as it can at the
lowest possible price (mbk-news.appspot.com/sences/evolyuciya-idei-soyuznogo-gosudarstva/).
Thus, what is in prospect now,
Pastukhov argues, is “not an Anschluss, but the transformation [of Belarus] by
mafia methods. That is, the selective swallowing [by Moscow] of everything Lukashenka
until now had managed to retain.” Faced with a revolution at home, Lukashenka
has little left with which to bargain
against that outcome.
This is only the latest stage in the
evolution of the original idea of the Union state. When it was announced,
Lukashenka thought he had a very good chance to head the combination of the two
countries. Many in Russia backed what he was doing, and Yeltsin was clearly in
a much weaker position. But Yeltsin chose Putin not Lukashenka and the unification
was put on hold.
After 2000, neither Putin nor
Lukashenka had any particular need for unification. Putin not at all, and
Lukashenka only as a prospect that could help him extract money and support
from the Kremlin. The idea of the union
state became like a bottle that had once contained expensive wine and might
again but was now empty.
A decade later, Putin changed his
approach, first because he thought that the creation of a deeper union state
might solve his problem of eliminating restrictions on the number of terms he
could serve. And Lukashenka exploited that idea to extract even more money and
support from Moscow.
But more recently things have
changed again. On the one hand, Putin found another way out of his
constitutional limitations. And on the other, Lukashenka who had seemed so
successful earlier began to fail significantly. As Pastukhov notes, Lukashenka
and Putin are often compared because neither is particularly attached to
democracy.
There is now, however, a major difference. Putin by fair means and foul has always been
able to win elections. Indeed, he would likely be able to do so even without falsification,
albeit with far smaller majorities than he and his team consider necessary to justify
his position in the Putinist state.
Lukashenka in contrast has done so
poorly at home that his massive falsification efforts could not hide from his
own people the fact that he lost the last election. That leaves him in a much-weakened
position, one in which the Kremlin will take whatever it wants away from Minsk
even if Belarus remains nominally an independent country.
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